Harriet Tubman was born around the year of 1820, in Dorchester County, Maryland. Although many know her as Harriet Tubman, this was not her birth name; she was birthed as Araminta Ross. The name Harriet came from her mother, Harriet Green, who was a cook. Her father, Ben Ross, was a skilled woodsman. Tubman faced a lot of pressure and issues growing up as a child. At the age of five, she had a job that consisted of nursing an infant. She had to constantly rock and hold the baby, so it would not cry. If the baby was heard crying by the mistress, then Tubman would suffer consequences that would involve her getting whipped. About two years later, she was hired to collect rats from traps, which caused her to become ill. Once around this time, due to fear of punishment, Tubman ran away for about three days after she was caught sneaking sugar. During these days, she was hidden in a pigpen, where she competed with them for food. By the time Tubman turned twelve, she was able to work in the fields. Also, around this time, she received a …show more content…
Since Harriet was still a slave, their marriage was not official. Also, since she was still a slave, there was a risk of her being sold. It is believed that the two were separated when she escaped to freedom. He had remarried by the time she returned. Twenty-three years later, in 1867, John Tubman died in an altercation with another man. Twenty-five years later after the beginning of her first marriage with John Tubman, she married Nelson Davis, which was in 1869. Unlike her first marriage, Harriet and Nelson’s marriage was official. The two were married at a Presbyterian church in Auburn, New York. Together, the couple ran a farm and brick business. In 1874, Harriet and Nelson adopted a baby girl, known as Gertie Davis. Years later, in 1888, Nelson Davis died.2 Aside from Harriet Tubman’s childhood and love life, she had many more adventures throughout her